The Indiana Court of Appeals split today as to whether a woman who had an order for protection against her should have been
convicted of invasion of privacy when she spoke to the protected party during a court hearing.

The Indiana Court of Appeals affirmed summary judgment today for a landlord who was sued by a postal carrier who was bit by
a tenant’s dog that had escaped from the property. The judges declined to find that by entering into a lease, a landlord
establishes a relationship to a tenant’s dog.

A man claiming he proved he was unable to pay child support because of his numerous incarcerations did not convince the Indiana
Court of Appeals. In its ruling today, the court relied on Becker v. Becker to affirm the man’s conviction
of Class C felony nonsupport of a dependent child.

A trial court didn’t abuse its discretion when it admitted transcripts translated into English of drug transactions
recorded in Spanish because the jury wouldn’t be able to understand the recording, the Indiana Court of Appeals ruled.

The Indiana Court of Appeals split today in its decision of who should receive back child support payments from a father who
kidnapped his son for 16 years before turning himself in when the son was 23 years old.

The Indiana Court of Appeals was split today in its decision to reverse the revocation of a defendant's probation. The
judges didn't agree that the probation revocation hearing comported with due process.

In a matter of first impression, the Indiana Court of Appeals decided today that a summary judgment granting insurance policies
isn't equivalent to a money judgment that would allow for 8 percent post-judgment interest.

A trial court didn't abuse its discretion in admitting evidence that a juvenile possessed marijuana because the seizure
of the drug didn't violate the teen's constitutional rights, the Indiana Court of Appeals ruled.

Even though a police officer didn't see a driver commit any traffic infractions before pulling him over, the officer could
stop the car because he believed the driver might have been injured or impaired, the Indiana Court of Appeals affirmed today.

The Indiana Court of Appeals determined that manufactured mobile homes are subject to Indiana's common law warranty of
habitability, so it reversed the grant of summary judgment in favor of a manufacturer in a homeowner's property damage
and personal injury complaint.

The Indiana Court of Appeals split today in its decision as to whether Indiana's two-year statute of limitations for personal
injury torts or the three-year statute of limitations under the Federal Employers' Liability Act applied in a man's
FELA claim in state court.

A trial court didn't err in imposing three consecutive sentences following a man's guilty plea to three counts of
felony non-support of a dependent because his failure to pay didn't constitute a single episode of criminal activity,
the Indiana Court of Appeals ruled today.

The Indiana Court of Appeals affirmed a trial court's decision not to award a man credit time for pretrial home detention,
finding the man's rights weren't violated under the federal or Indiana constitutions.

The Indiana Court of Appeals reversed a trial court's decision to continue the parental rights of two incarcerated parents,
finding it to be in the child's best interest to sever the rights because the parents possibly won't be released from
prison for two more years.

The Indiana Court of Appeals upheld a trial court's decision that an insurance company was estopped from denying coverage
to the suspected driver of a car because the company failed to properly preserve its right to deny the driver coverage.